985 research outputs found

    Heavy Higgs Bosons at 14 TeV and 100 TeV

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    Searching for Higgs bosons beyond the Standard Model (BSM) is one of the most important missions for hadron colliders. As a landmark of BSM physics, the MSSM Higgs sector at the LHC is expected to be tested up to the scale of the decoupling limit of O(1) TeV, except for a wedge region centered around tanβ310\tan\beta \sim 3 -10, which has been known to be difficult to probe. In this article, we present a dedicated study testing the decoupled MSSM Higgs sector, at the LHC and a next-generation pppp-collider, proposing to search in channels with associated Higgs productions, with the neutral and charged Higgs further decaying into tttt and tbtb, respectively. In the case of neutral Higgs we are able to probe for the so far uncovered wedge region via ppbbH/Abbttpp\to bb H/A \to bbtt. Additionally, we cover the the high tanβ\tan\beta range with ppbbH/Abbττpp\to bb H/A \to bb\tau\tau. The combination of these searches with channels dedicated to the low tanβ\tan\beta region, such as ppH/Attpp\to H/A \to tt and ppttH/Attttpp\to tt H/A \to tttt potentially covers the full tanβ\tan\beta range. The search for charged Higgs has a slightly smaller sensitivity for the moderate tanβ\tan\beta region, but additionally probes for the higher and lower tanβ\tan\beta regions with even greater sensitivity, via pptbH±tbtbpp\to tb H^\pm \to tbtb. While the LHC will be able to probe the whole tanβ\tan\beta range for Higgs masses of O(1) TeV by combining these channels, we show that a future 100 TeV pppp-collider has a potential to push the sensitivity reach up to O(10)\sim \mathcal O(10) TeV. In order to deal with the novel kinematics of top quarks produced by heavy Higgs decays, the multivariate Boosted Decision Tree (BDT) method is applied in our collider analyses. The BDT-based tagging efficiencies of both hadronic and leptonic top-jets, and their mutual fake rates as well as the faking rates by other jets (hh, ZZ, WW, bb, etc.) are also presented.Comment: published versio

    Synthesis and Characterization of New Oxazolidin-4-one Derivatives via the Reaction of Various Some Imines with Glycolic Acid

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    New derivatives of 2,3-disubstituted- oxazolidine-4-one were synthesized by cycloaddition reaction of glycolic acid to various imines in anhydrous 1,4-dioxane under dry and reflux conditions. Imines were synthesized by acid–catalyzed thermal condensation of the amino group of aromatic amine and phenylhydrazines with the carbonyl group of aromatic aldehydes and ketones in absolute ethanol. The products were identified by C.H.N content FT-IR and 1HNMR spectr

    Synthesis and Characterization of Some New Oxazolidinone and Thiazolidinone Derivatives Via Reaction of Schiff Bases Derived from some Amino Acids

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    New derivatives of 2,3- substituted – oxazolidinone and thiazolidinone were synthesized by cycloaddition reaction of glycolic acid and thioglycolic to various Schiff bases derived from some commercially available amino acids in anhydrous 1,4-dioxane under dry and reflux conditions. Schiff's bases were synthesized by refluxing various amino acids with aromatic aldehydes and ketones with few drops of glacial acetic acid as a catalyst in absolute methanol. The products were isolated, purified and characterized by their melting point , FT-IR and 1HNMR spectra and C.H.N analysis

    ‘When I look at this van, it’s not only a van’: symbolic objects in the policing of migration

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    The ‘Go Home Van’ was the centrepiece of the UK government’s 2013 immigration enforcement campaign. Vehicles were driven around ethnically diverse London neighbourhoods clad with giant posters offering irregular migrants a choice between ‘voluntary departure’ and criminal arrest. Abandoned shortly afterwards in response to complaints, the GHV nonetheless had a significant impact on migrants. Through interviews and focus groups, this article investigates what was conveyed by the van, and the means by which it achieved these effects. We find that the GHV communicated meanings about the illegitimacy and criminality of migrants, with its material characteristics (visibility and mobility) as important as the words and pictures on its surface. Migrants sought to resist the van through hiding, while support organisations rejected dominant meanings and crafted alternatives. The article establishes a research agenda around the wider role of symbolic objects, in the context of the global migration crisis

    Levels of VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 in serum of active and inactive Systemic Lupus Erythematosus patients as biochemical markers for risk of cardiovascular disease

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    Background: Cardiovascular complications represent one of the consequences of chronic autoimmune diseases such as Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE), which has significant rates of morbidity and mortality. Dyslipidemia can be brought on by steroid medications, which are frequently given to SLE patients and are considered to be one of the major risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. Objectives: This study attempted to investigate a potential association between circulating vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1) and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) as risk factors for atherosclerosis and their relationship to cardiovascular risk. Patients and methods: A total of 100 patients and 50 apparently healthy controls were included in the study. All patients were from the Department of Rheumatology, Baghdad Hospital / Medical City during the period from 1 December 2021 to 1 March 2022 who were all treated with antimalarial drugs as immunosuppressants such as chloroquine (CQ) or hydroxychloroquine HCQ). They were divided according to the SLE disease activity index 2000 (SLEDAI-2K) into the active group (SLEDAI ≥ 10) and the inactive group (SLEDAI). Results: Serum VCAM and ICAM were significantly high in all study groups of SLE patients. The VCAM mean ± SD were (271.9±63.90), (247.9±82.92) and (97.7±24.69) in the active, inactive controls respectively. The ICAM mean ± SD were (3.1±0.91), (2.7±0.79) and (1.8±0.22) in the active, inactive and controls respectively. The values have increased gradually with increasing disease activity. The area under curve (AUC) of ICAM and VCAM were (0.802), (0.776) in active SLE patients and (0.858), (0.674) in inactive SLE patients. However, the AUC of VCAM and ICAM in active group were the highest. Conclusion: In SLE patients, VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 serum levels may operate as disease detection and severity differentiation indicators, and they may be linked to the number of coronary lesions in people at risk of developing CVD. Received: Aug.,2022 Accepted: Sept., 2022 Published: April 2023

    A general wavelet-based profile decomposition in the critical embedding of function spaces

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    We characterize the lack of compactness in the critical embedding of functions spaces XYX\subset Y having similar scaling properties in the following terms : a sequence (un)n0(u_n)_{n\geq 0} bounded in XX has a subsequence that can be expressed as a finite sum of translations and dilations of functions (ϕl)l>0(\phi_l)_{l>0} such that the remainder converges to zero in YY as the number of functions in the sum and nn tend to ++\infty. Such a decomposition was established by G\'erard for the embedding of the homogeneous Sobolev space X=H˙sX=\dot H^s into the Y=LpY=L^p in dd dimensions with 0<s=d/2d/p0<s=d/2-d/p, and then generalized by Jaffard to the case where XX is a Riesz potential space, using wavelet expansions. In this paper, we revisit the wavelet-based profile decomposition, in order to treat a larger range of examples of critical embedding in a hopefully simplified way. In particular we identify two generic properties on the spaces XX and YY that are of key use in building the profile decomposition. These properties may then easily be checked for typical choices of XX and YY satisfying critical embedding properties. These includes Sobolev, Besov, Triebel-Lizorkin, Lorentz, H\"older and BMO spaces.Comment: 24 page

    Recycling bins, garbage cans or think tanks? Three myths regarding policy analysis institutes

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    The phrase 'think tank' has become ubiquitous – overworked and underspecified – in the political lexicon. It is entrenched in scholarly discussions of public policy as well as in the 'policy wonk' of journalists, lobbyists and spin-doctors. This does not mean that there is an agreed definition of think tank or consensual understanding of their roles and functions. Nevertheless, the majority of organizations with this label undertake policy research of some kind. The idea of think tanks as a research communication 'bridge' presupposes that there are discernible boundaries between (social) science and policy. This paper will investigate some of these boundaries. The frontiers are not only organizational and legal; they also exist in how the 'public interest' is conceived by these bodies and their financiers. Moreover, the social interactions and exchanges involved in 'bridging', themselves muddy the conception of 'boundary', allowing for analysis to go beyond the dualism imposed in seeing science on one side of the bridge, and the state on the other, to address the complex relations between experts and public policy

    Antagonism of the Azoles to Olorofim and Cross-Resistance Are Governed by Linked Transcriptional Networks in Aspergillus fumigatus

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    Aspergillosis, in its various manifestations, is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Very few classes of antifungal drugs have been approved for clinical use to treat these diseases and resistance to the first-line therapeutic class, the triazoles are increasing. A new class of antifungals that target pyrimidine biosynthesis, the orotomides, are currently in development with the first compound in this class, olorofim in late-stage clinical trials. In this study, we identified an antagonistic action of the triazoles on the action of olorofim. We showed that this antagonism was the result of an azole-induced upregulation of the pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway. Intriguingly, we showed that loss of function in the higher order transcription factor, HapB a member of the heterotrimeric HapB/C/E (CBC) complex or the regulator of nitrogen metabolic genes AreA, led to cross-resistance to both the azoles and olorofim, indicating that factors that govern resistance were under common regulatory control. However, the loss of azole-induced antagonism required decoupling of the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway in a manner independent of the action of a single transcription factor. Our study provided evidence for complex transcriptional crosstalk between the pyrimidine and ergosterol biosynthetic pathways. IMPORTANCE: Aspergillosis is a spectrum of diseases and a major cause of morbidity and mortality. To treat these diseases, there are a few classes of antifungal drugs approved for clinical use. Resistance to the first line treatment, the azoles, is increasing. The first antifungal, olorofim, which is in the novel class of orotomides, is currently in development. Here, we showed an antagonistic effect between the azoles and olorofim, which was a result of dysregulation of the pyrimidine pathway, the target of olorofim, and the ergosterol biosynthesis pathway, the target of the azoles.This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust grant number 219551/Z/19/Z and 208396/Z/17/Z to M.J.B. C.V. was funded by a postdoctoral fellowship from Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP-BEPE 2020/01131-5).S

    "Open Innovation" and "Triple Helix" Models of Innovation: Can Synergy in Innovation Systems Be Measured?

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    The model of "Open Innovations" (OI) can be compared with the "Triple Helix of University-Industry-Government Relations" (TH) as attempts to find surplus value in bringing industrial innovation closer to public R&D. Whereas the firm is central in the model of OI, the TH adds multi-centeredness: in addition to firms, universities and (e.g., regional) governments can take leading roles in innovation eco-systems. In addition to the (transversal) technology transfer at each moment of time, one can focus on the dynamics in the feedback loops. Under specifiable conditions, feedback loops can be turned into feedforward ones that drive innovation eco-systems towards self-organization and the auto-catalytic generation of new options. The generation of options can be more important than historical realizations ("best practices") for the longer-term viability of knowledge-based innovation systems. A system without sufficient options, for example, is locked-in. The generation of redundancy -- the Triple Helix indicator -- can be used as a measure of unrealized but technologically feasible options given a historical configuration. Different coordination mechanisms (markets, policies, knowledge) provide different perspectives on the same information and thus generate redundancy. Increased redundancy not only stimulates innovation in an eco-system by reducing the prevailing uncertainty; it also enhances the synergy in and innovativeness of an innovation system.Comment: Journal of Open Innovations: Technology, Market and Complexity, 2(1) (2016) 1-12; doi:10.1186/s40852-016-0039-
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